Canadian Entry Uses Parafoil Technology
The popular idea of unmanned aerial
vehicles is that they are like aggrandized radio-controlled planes,
good only for reconnaissance and scouting, but the UAV flight
demonstration at Naval Air Station Patuxent River's Webster Field
July 14 showed there's more to the story.
UAVs also may start doing airlift missions. A Canadian firm has
developed a UAV capable of delivering supplies to special
operations forces. One, called the SnowGoose, can be dropped from
another aircraft or launched off the back of a Humvee.
The SnowGoose promises pinpoint delivery of small cargoes. U.S.
Special Operations Command has bought five of the aircraft,
according to MIST Mobility Integrated Systems Technology, Inc. U.S.
officials said the command could ultimately buy 74 of the UAVs.
Slow but sneaky
The aircraft operates with a parasail and a pusher engine. It
can operate at altitudes ranging from 200 feet to 18,000 feet. It
is virtually undetectable at altitudes of 2,000 feet or more.
"That's a good thing, because it cruises at about 35 knots," said
Sean McCann, a company representative who showed off the SnowGoose
at the flight demonstration.
The SnowGoose could be used to drop leaflets, small amounts of
ammunition, medical supplies and other equipment. "Mogadishu would
have been a perfect place for this type of capability," said Clark
Butner, a UAV specialist with Naval Air Systems Command's special
communications requirements division. He was referring to
1993 U.S. military operations in the Somali capital when 18 Rangers
helping to conduct a mission to capture warlords were killed. "The
Rangers didn't bring their (night optical devices) when they went
on the mission," Butner noted. "This aircraft could have dropped
NODs to them, delivered plasma to them and dropped ammo."
A small laptop computer allows technicians to program in a
mission, which can proceed without another command from the ground.
Right now, once the mission is launched, planners cannot change
it.
However, MMIST is working with
the UAV Systems Office in Huntsville (AL), on an advanced concept
technology demonstration that will allow planners to change the
mission at any time.
"The (Airborne Guidance Unit) provides all the flight control,"
McCann said. "Payload bins are automatically released, taking wind
speed and direction into consideration. The AGU calculates the
release points in flight and are based on real-time wind
measurements."
McCann stated the aircraft can change position up to six
kilometers due to varying conditions.
The aircraft doesn't need a runway, and a four-man team can
operate it. Butner said a team could learn to operate the system in
10 days. "It's not complicated," he said. The most complicated
thing may be repacking the parasail after a mission, he said.
Each SnowGoose costs around $250,000.
[Thanks to Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service
--ed.]